Fujifilm: El avance de la endoscopia para detectar y vencer los cánceres colorrectales

Pruebas y escáneres
símbolo de héroe

Escrito por Tai Fujita

Tai Fujita es Director General de Endoscopia de FUJIFILM Healthcare Americas. Es licenciado por la Universidad Keio de Tokio, el instituto de enseñanza superior occidental más antiguo de Japón..

Robert, a father of two, husband and salesman who travels around the world for work, started experiencing abdominal pain and found himself feeling more tired than usual. At first, he chalked these symptoms up to a busy work schedule and diet changes due to business travel but decided to see his doctor for a checkup to be safe.

After talking through his symptoms, Robert and his physician agreed that a colonoscopy was required to get to the root of the problem.

During the colonoscopy, Robert’s physician found and was able to completely remove several pólipos, some of which were pre-cancerous.

Fortunately, because Robert’s cancer was found in its early stages, he was able to undergo a successful surgery. Today, Robert is cancer free and lives a fruitful life doing the things he loves: spending time with his family and working in a rewarding career.

Individuals like Robert are embracing life today for one simple reason: Colonoscopy. Thanks to this non–invasive screening exam, Robert’s doctors caught colorectal cancer soon enough to save his life.

CCR: tratable y vencible

Colorectal cancer (CRC) is the third most common cancer in men and women in the United States and the second most deadly behind lung cancer. In 2024 CRC moved up from the fourth to the third most common cancer, and of all cancers, CRC is expected to take the most lives of people under 50 by 2030.

The U.S. Preventive Services Task force strongly believes that regular screenings are the best way to keep this cancer at bay, leading to their decision in 2021 to lower the age for CRC screenings to 45 after a worrisome spike in cases of CRC in people younger than 50.

While the statistics are unsettling, medical device innovators are continuously bringing new and advanced endoscopy solutions for use in hospitals and ambulatory surgery centers (ASCs) across the country. This is crucial as screening with endoscopes can find pre-cancerous polyps so they can be removed before they turn into cancer. They can also detect CRC early when treatment works best.

Esto significa que, con un cribado adecuado, el CCR puede ser una de las enfermedades más prevenibles, tratables y vencibles.

Mirar al frente Mirar al interior

Reconozcámoslo. El tema de la colonoscopia puede provocar ansiedad, vergüenza o incluso miedo en algunas personas. Afortunadamente, muchas organizaciones y celebridades han tomado medidas para reducir cualquier preocupación potencial en torno a la colonoscopia.

Singer/songwriter Sheryl Crow, actor Ryan Reynolds, racecar driver Scott Lagasse, Jr., professional quarterback Dak Prescott, and Texas Rangers third-base coach Tony Beasley have all been involved in initiatives to raise awareness about the importance of screenings. Indeed, celebrities are very much out front about looking inside!

After all, that’s exactly what a colonoscopia, which is performed with an endoscope, does. The Greek prefix “endo-” means "within, inside." With endoscopes, physicians can look inside the body to detect, diagnose, and treat diseases in minimally-or non-invasive ways—so conditions that once required surgery can now be addressed without even making an incision.

However, while screening modalities can effectively reduce CRC incidence, U.S. screening rates remain low at 67%.

It isn’t surprising, then, that coincident with the decrease in endoscopic procedures, there was a concerning increase in early-onset colorectal cancer. That’s why now it’s more important than ever for all stakeholders—doctors, patient advocacy groups and medical device companies—to encourage patients to get back on track with their routine screenings.

This is why Fujifilm has partnered with Fight CRC.

Moreover, Fujifilm’s innovations support both the screening and treatment of CRC worldwide to help to tackle the surge of early-onset colorectal cancer.

Tecnología de nueva generación

Staying true to our photography and imaging roots, one of Fujifilm’s most impactful solutions available today uses high-definition imaging to give physicians a greater look at what’s happening inside the body – now with the help of Artificial Intelligence (AI).

New advancements in AI help alert patient’s physicians of polyps in real-time – both visually and audibly – even those that can be hard for the human eye to see. Studies show that Fujifilm’s newest AI technology for endoscopy – known as CAD EYE - is supporting physicians by helping to identify polyps during colonoscopy procedures in real-time.

Also in 2024, Fujifilm introduced SCALE EYE, a new and innovative endoscopic imaging technology for measuring colonic polyps. A patient’s polyp size is important, as the size helps the endoscopists determine how often a patient should return for follow-up screening or how they should remove the polyps.

While the industry has had access to a few tools like physical endoscopic rulers to help measure polyps once they are removed, they are cumbersome to use and time-consuming. Early results of Fujifilm’s SCALE EYE technology – a virtual measuring tool visible through the endoscope at the touch of a button - show it is superior in terms of accuracy and time compared with other traditional methods.

Esta imagen muestra la comparación de la utilización de imágenes de luz blanca, imágenes en color enlazadas (LCI), imágenes de luz azul (BLI) y BLI con aumento para apoyar la detección y el diagnóstico óptico de un pólipo de colon.

(A) Imagen de luz blanca. (B) LCI mejora la detectabilidad del tumor; (C) BLI mejora la detectabilidad del tumor; (D) BLI con aumento mostró criptas dilatadas y vasos dilatados. Lesión no polipoide, 10 mm, ciego. Adenoma de alto grado

Fomento de la asistencia y la educación

Fujifilm is advancing patient care and physician education at hundreds of clinical settings across the U.S., from leading academic medical centers to small ambulatory surgery centers (ASCs). For example, fully integrated Fujifilm endoscopy systems have been installed at Dartmouth, in Colorado at Endoscopia PEAKJoseph's, y en Jacksonville en la Clínica Mayo, por nombrar algunos.

Una de las instalaciones más interesantes se encuentra en Hospital Brigham and Women's in Massachusetts which has been Fujifilm’s long-term endoscopy research partner and collaborator and is consistently ranked in the top tier of hospitals in the nation.

In 2022, Fujifilm equipado the 15,000-member American Society for Gastrointestinal Endoscopy (ASGE) Institute for Training & Technology, and global leader of advancement and education in the field of GI endoscopy, with 16 of Fujifilm’s industry-leading ELUXEO Endoscopic Imaging Systems and twenty 700 Series Endoscopes. The suite of comprehensive endoscopy solutions was installed in August 2022 and is utilized throughout ASGE’s live and virtual training programs for both endoscopy fellows and seasoned endoscopy professionals.

Es más, Fujifilm forja alianzas estratégicas con los principales médicos de numerosas instituciones sanitarias destacadas de todo el mundo. Estos médicos de renombre proporcionan información que nos ayuda a optimizar la tecnología existente y contribuye al desarrollo de tecnologías avanzadas de próxima generación que pueden alargar y salvar vidas.

Innovation and collaboration fuels Fujifilm and our partners. Our collective mission is to raise awareness, boost screening compliance, and improve colorectal cancer patient outcomes. Talk to your doctor about colonoscopy screening today. It could save your life tomorrow.

Transformación para una visión más amplia

Mucha gente conoce Fujifilm por sus cámaras instantáneas ["INSTAX"] y digitales, pero ¿sabía que la empresa empezó a aplicar su experiencia en el campo de la imagen sanitaria revelando película de rayos X a partir de su película fotográfica en 1936?

Desde entonces, Fujifilm ha ido transformando sus tecnologías básicas desarrolladas a partir de la fabricación de películas fotográficas y ha dedicado gran parte de su energía a la medicina, la biotecnología y la sanidad.

La reinvención de la empresa y su misión es tan extraordinaria que se convirtió en un clásico estudio de casos empresariales de Harvard y en un reportaje más reciente de la revista Fortune.

Nuestras cámaras digitales están desarrolladas con sensores X-Trans CMOS para producir imágenes de alta calidad con la riqueza de color, tonalidad y dimensionalidad necesarias para captar la gran imagen. Ahora imagine adaptar y transformar esta tecnología de imagen para permitir el detalle y la precisión necesarios para visualizar el más pequeño de los microvasos de su tracto gastrointestinal. Eso es innovación.

Hoy en día, las innovaciones de Fujifilm en el campo de la imagen médica son un factor clave en esa transformación y se utilizan en centros sanitarios de primera línea de todo el mundo. Nuestra sólida cartera de productos de imagen médica incluye soluciones para radiografía digital, mamografía, tomografía computarizada, resonancia magnética, ecografía, gastroenterología, neumología, endocirugía, cirugía mínimamente invasiva, así como una galardonada cartera de productos de imagen empresarial.

From blazing new trails in the field of technology to working towards a healthier society through healthcare innovations, Fujifilm understands the importance of building a better future for all. For 90 years, Fujifilm has developed and expanded our healthcare business in the areas of prevention, diagnosis, and treatment. As a comprehensive healthcare company with a wide range of technologies and expertise, we will never stop innovating for a healthier world.


Tai Fujita is General Manager of Endoscopy for FUJIFILM Healthcare Americas. He is a graduate of Keio University in Tokyo, the oldest institute of western higher education in Japan.